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One of the major reasons Rushing finally filed this legislation, he tells the Phoenix, was the manner in which former governor Mitt Romney found, and abused, the old and forgotten statute that prohibits issuing marriage licenses to out-of-state residents who can not legally marry in their home state. Romney ordered all city and town clerks to not issue marriage licenses to the same-sex couples seeking to get married in the only state that would marry them. The Supreme Judicial Court, which had just approved gay marriages in Massachusetts, nevertheless upheld Romney's interpretation of the residency statute, for while the statute might have been old and forgotten, it happened not to be unconstitutional and was still on the books.

All the more reason, says Rushing, to have the legislature “get into the habit of reviewing all of our general laws every five years or so, in order to get rid not only of laws that have become unconstitutional, but also have become undesirable.” The legislature routinely reviews the statutes for typographical errors and inconsistencies, he says. “Why not periodically get rid of laws that we no longer want?”

Rushing’s bill serves as a wake-up call, more than anything, to an oft-neglected, not-so-comical problem with modern criminal law: the old phrase “throw the book at him” has now morphed into throwing a veritable library of nutty laws. It’s time to trim the criminal code down to manageable size, and Rushing’s bill is a good first step.

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  Topics: News Features , Mitt Romney, Culture and Lifestyle, GLBT Issues,  More more >
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Comments
Moldy justice
So why doesn't the Bar Association in each state take the lead in reviewing state statutes and compiling a list of obsolete and unconstitutional laws for corrective action by the general legislature? Many law firms specialize in certain areas of the law and would be well suited to make such a review.
By Krogy on 10/14/2007 at 8:14:53
Moldy justice
Hi, I just saw your article. I'm Angela Guilford, and you are correct in your article when you say old or badly writtenlaws just leave room for Police abuse. The Hoover Police used a badly written law to selectively prosecute my store. They ignored the Hemp and hemp seeds sold by Walmart,and over 30 other stores within a one mile radius of the store. They flat out told me during the raid that the reason for it was because of the store's alternative type merchandise. Local religious nuts and the City Council were behind it, also. Ironically, I found out a few years later that the ONE shopper that was in the store when the cops came in with guns drawn was the DAUGHTER OF THE VICE AND NARCOTICS HEAD, who was leading to "bust". He let his daughter leave the store. :)
By witchblade37 on 11/07/2007 at 11:45:17

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